Intergraph hit by further Intel court setback
Anti-trust case going nowhere slowly
Posted in Business, 7th November 1999 19:20 GMT
Free Download - Security Web 2.0
A long-running case Intergraph has waged against chip giant Intel suffered a further blow Friday last when a US court of appeal said the chip giant is not violating anti-trust legislation. The ruling, reported on news.com, said that Intergraph's argument that Intel had cut off technological information and stopped supply of CPUs did not, in itself, breach US anti-trust legislation. While the appeals court, in its ruling, acknowledged that Intel had behaved harshly against Intergraph, this could not be construed as a violation of the Sherman Act. It suspended an injunction in a lower, district court, and sent a clear signal that it believed Intel did not behave in a monopolistic manner. While Intergraph can appeal this decision in a higher US court, there is some doubt about whether it will do so. The long-standing action has already drained Intergraph of funds and energy. Last month, another US court rejected an Intergraph claim that Intel had breached its patents. ®

An Improved Architecture for High-Efficiency, High-Density Data Centers [WP126]
Ten Cooling Solutions to Support High-Density Server Deployment [WP42]
Implementing Energy Efficient Data Centers [WP114]
LDAP Injection
The Register Guide to Extended Validation

The GUI that almost conquered the pocket
HP breaks Japanese excessive packaging record
Still sending naked email? Get your protection here
OpenOffice 3.0 - the only option for masochistic Linux users